In some cases, nothing went wrong.
Coleman supporter Jerald McElmury, of North St. Paul, wasn't surprised to be rejected. He didn't take any chances with his vote. He cast it -- twice. "I voted early," McElmury said, of his absentee ballot that was later rejected, "but drove my wife to the polls and decided I'd vote again, to make sure it was counted. I figured it would get flagged that I voted twice, so it worked exactly the way it was supposed to, for me."
Only a handful were rejected because voters subsequently voted in person on Election Day. A few ballots were invalidated because the voters didn't provide valid proof of their legal residence, lacked a valid reason for needing to vote absentee or returned their ballots to their local election office too late to be legally counted.
In four cases countywide, the ballots were rejected because the county's records showed the voter had died. Under state law, if a person who casts an absentee ballot dies before the election, the vote is not to be counted.
In Ramsey County, among rejected voters whose first names were identifiably male or female, 60 percent were women, compared with 53 percent of all voters statewide. Female voters favored Franken, according to exit polls. On the other hand, 79 percent of rejected Ramsey voters hailed from suburbs, which tend to be stronger for Republicans.